Going to try today

PullTabPete

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Detector(s) used
Excal II E-trac EQ 800
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Have been waiting for the ground to thaw for months. Checked my yard yesterday when the sun was out and it wasn't too hard frozen just a little crunchy at about 4 inches.

Finishing my coffee now looking at a nice frost on the ground and 20 degrees on my thermometer. Oh well can't find anything sitting at computer.

Going out to a nearby older school.

HH,

Pete
 

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Good luck, keep warm
 

Glad I got it out. My car was frosted over, got to the schoolyard and the ground was rock solid. Almost turned around but figured I was out. Detected about 3 hours found some parts of the schoolyard that weren't as frozen as others.

Ended up 3 wheats, about 1.50 clad and a sterling St. Christopher medal. Also found a copper FDR coin if anyone recognizes it let me know. I think it might have a been a gas station promotion from the 70's.

Thanks for looking and HH,

Pete

Frosted Car
frosty_car.webp
Finds
0323_hunt.webp0323_good_stuff.webp
fdr_back.webpfdr_front.webp
st_chris.webp
 

Nice finds ! I'm dying to get back to my house demo site, but been there 2 or 3 times, and just cant dig yet. Hitting the beaches again this week, easier recovery.
 

Good luck at the beaches
 

Nice.... finds I just got a new machine and its snowing .......AGAIN in Iowa.... Going to have to travel South
 

I live in Georgia, so the ground here never freezes, but a thought occurs to me. Have you guys tried using steel trowels for digging and using a mini-torch to heat up the spade before you put it to task? It seems that the only semi-practical way of making digging into frozen ground any easier is by using an hot tool. It wouldn't work in the deep of winter, obviously, but maybe it could extend your detecting year by a few weeks. If you're just going to hurt yourself digging into ice anyway, you might as well spend a few dollars worth of butane to make it easier.
 

I had the cabin fever and was ready to get out. Spring thaw has been a little late to arrive but depending where you look some spots are a lot more frozen then others. After finding my first target and then trying to dig into a rock, I looked for some other spots not so hard frozen and had some success. I think if I need the torch(which I have one I use to dethaw my water spigot when I resurface my ice rink) it may be too early in the season for detecting.

There has been some posts debating that you should wait when ground is frozen so you don't destroy it. I can respect that, but where I was digging wasn't exactly a pristine fairway so I am am quite cognizant of what I am digging in. Between the molehills, mud patches and tire tracks any small damage from digging is unoticeable. Of course when in a nice manicured grass area I treat it as such and won't dig if I think I am damaging it.

HH,

Pete
 

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